There is no such verb as "mad".
A pair is two A pair of socks = two socks
People wove straw together to make the first socks.
The first pair of jeans that were invented were the blue jeans
who invented the first pair of slippers
In order to get a matching pair, you must take out a minimum of two and a maximum of three socks. Reasoning: The question does not specify a color for the pair of socks, it just asks for a pair of matching socks (same color). Hence, the first sock you pull will be either red or white, and the second sock you pull will also be either red or white. If the second sock matches the first one, you have a matching pair (reason for my "minimum of two"). If the second sock did not match the first sock, then you have one red and one white sock. The third sock you pull will also be either red or white and you will have a matching pair of either red or white socks (reason for my "maximum of three").
They were invented in 1452!
The independent event is the first pair of socks. The dependent event is the second pair of socks, because the first pair changes the probability of the second pair.Yes, the question said "at the same time", but this answer remains valid because one pair will affect the other pair, somehow, someway, i.e. even if you choose both pairs "in the blind", they are mutually interdependent. That's the real answer.
The weight of a pair of socks can vary depending on the material, size, and style of the socks. On average, a pair of regular adult socks typically weighs around 50-100 grams.
ME:)
The collective noun for 'socks' is a pair of socks. There is no standard collective noun for a larger quantity of socks. A collective noun is an informal part of language, any noun suitable for the situation can function as a collective noun; for example, 'a load of socks', 'a bundle of socks', or perhaps 'a crew of socks'.
In 1589. William Lee invented the first sock.